BLR-CAD is an open source, global, beneficial and useful software. It allows you to correct other people faults, it allows you to become more fluent with software editing and help other people use applications with the least faults possible. It also a chance for the community on BLR-CAD to use each other’s skills, to perfect an application or software posted.

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Geometry Viewer-

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What is a geometry viewer?

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The person who made BLR-CAD is called Mike Muuss, who was born on the 16 of October 1958 and died on the 20th of November 2000. He graduated from Johns Hopkins University and then went on to become a senior scientist at the United States Army Research Laboratory. He a computer scientist legend gaining the Flame (lifetime achievement award), honouring only the best 180 individuals. He was also mentioned in two books. He was such a legend his friends and family set up The Michael J. Muuss Research Award, memorializes him at Johns Hopkins University.

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It’s a service which allows users to manage all there geometry files. It can upload and view BRL-CAD geometry files in a different format so that others can edit it. But it’s currently under construction.

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It’s the equivalent to?

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BLR-CAD designed to be a cross- platform and used on commonly used operating systems, such as Windows, Mac OS X, Linux etc.

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It’s like a Facebook for files where you can share other files with the public and then they can edit, change or fix the application to make it smother.

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Also the fact BLR-CAD is open source software; it can improve your problem solving skills because fixing code and application requires you to solve problems.

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Why is it used?

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BLR-CAD is the primary service that the USA army use to model weapons to improve reliability, how lethal it is, mechanical parts, range, accuracy etc. It’s also been used to teach computer science, problem solving, planning and loads of more other skills.

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It’s used to allow the user to become more organised and make the user interface easier to follow and understand.

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What is needed to access this service?

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BLR-CAD has a collection of 400 tools and ultities to help you improve the applications and the best thing about it is that… IT’S FREE!

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All you need on your computer with a Web GL supported browser, BRL-CAD, three.js and a Linux Apache MySQL PHP (LAMP).

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How it works?

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Using BRL-CAD it changes the format to OBJ and loads it through the three.js all in all it converts then loads.

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Advantages…

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•Easier for the user to manage

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•Allows all user to see the file as it converts the format

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•Makes sharing easier and safer due to the fact you still have overall control

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•It allows the skills of strangers to improve your application safely

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•Its currently under construction so more features will be add

By Mohamed Hammeda

By Mohamed Hammeda

Revision as of 17:21, 19 December 2013

Welcome to the BRL-CAD community publication portal. This page is dedicated to the preparation and editing of BRL-CAD announcements. Proposed and upcoming topics are listed. Anyone is welcome and encouraged to share news about any activity related to BRL-CAD. Community editing and review are encouraged.

Ready for Publication

These articles are ready for publication. Release notes should be posted after tarballs, ideally the last or first week of a month. Other publications should be scheduled one or two weeks later, ideally on the second or third week of the month.

Note: if you see a comment indicating that a section is FROZEN, any changes you make in that section may go unnoticed as the article is being prepared for distribution. If you find errors in a FROZEN article, go ahead and correct the article but contact Sean (brlcad on freenode IRC) who may be able to incorporate changes during final publication.

Move from Final Review to Here When Ready

Final Review

Geometry Viewer

Geometry Viewer-
What is a geometry viewer?

It’s a service which allows users to manage all there geometry files. It can upload and view BRL-CAD geometry files in a different format so that others can edit it. But it’s currently under construction.
It’s the equivalent to?

It’s like a Facebook for files where you can share other files with the public and then they can edit, change or fix the application to make it smother.
Why is it used?

It’s used to allow the user to become more organised and make the user interface easier to follow and understand.
What is needed to access this service?

All you need on your computer with a Web GL supported browser, BRL-CAD, three.js and a Linux Apache MySQL PHP (LAMP).
How it works?

Using BRL-CAD it changes the format to OBJ and loads it through the three.js all in all it converts then loads.

Advantages…
•Easier for the user to manage
•Allows all user to see the file as it converts the format
•Makes sharing easier and safer due to the fact you still have overall control
•It allows the skills of strangers to improve your application safely
•Its currently under construction so more features will be add

Would you like to make improvements to software that vast numbers of users will benefit from?

Would you like to enhance your resume and gain wider experience? Do you have some spare time?

We need a software maintainer/release maintainer. Maintainers are needed for free and open source software to perform a variety of tasks. As BRL-CAD is a cross-platform system it has maintainers allocated to many binary platforms but does not currently have one for Windows. We are looking for someone to fill this voluntary role which is critical when releasing software.

A maintainer is someone who is basically willing to support creating the release for a particular platform (In this case Windows). Typical responsibilities include building source code into a binary package, patching and investigating platform issues, naming and announcing a release.

To find out more or to indicate your interest, announce your interest either through:

Google Code In 2013 Updates

The Google Code-in is a contest to introduce pre-university students (ages 13-17) to the many kinds of contributions that make open source software development possible. This is the second consecutive year when the esteemed open source solid modeling tool, BRL-CAD is accepted to participate in Google Code-In, out of the total of 10 organizations chosen.

Many of you would be wondering about the participation of BRL-CAD in GCI so far and hence, I came up with this post. The contest runs from November 18, 2013 to January 6, 2014. Its December,15 today, where we are exactly half-way on the journey. This year BRL-CAD has received an over-whelming response from young smart talented kids from all around the world, where they are contributing to small itty-bitty tasks of not more than 72 hours based in various domains related to software development and maintenance like Coding, Documentation and Training, Quality Assurance, User Interface and Outreach and Research.

After many task claims, reclaims, rejection, improvements, exchange of ideas and views between students and mentors via comments, IRC and mailing list and then acceptance of each task, till date, 87 tasks with minutely observed perfection have been closed successfully. 3 tasks are with status 'Needs Work', which means one of the mentors has sent back those tasks for more work. 4 tasks are on the to-be-reviewed list of mentors, 7 tasks currently claimed and 21 tasks are reopened and 85 tasks open with a total of 207 tasks.

I hope the young brains are enjoying while they work on the kinds of tasks they are comfortable. It is not just about working on tasks, it means much more than that. I bet, being a part of an awesome, cool and one of the most friendly open source organizations and working in collaboration with fantastic perks all across the planet Earth at such a small age will be an astronomical experience for participants.

A huge thanks to all participants for making it a huge and happening contest. Thanks to all mentors for adding tasks time-to-time to meet the demand and supply curve of fresh new tasks. Special thanks to Sean, the man without whom BRL-CAD's participation in GCI is hard to imagine. All the best kids for rest of the contest. A ticket to Google’s Mountain View, California, USA Headquarters is awaiting for two grand-prize winners. Good Luck ! :)

BRL-CAD Accomplishments : GCI 2012

Google Code -In 2012 brought 69 budding new shoots and branches to the mighty BRL-CAD tree, and the canopy of warmth and love offered by the community helped them blossom and bloom in the 7 weeks of the program . With a few snips, a little trimming and pruning, they have learned, innovated, created and contributed to one of the largest free and open source communities in the world, and have contributed to a software that will touch many people around the world. They now have their roots planted in the BRL-CAD community with the successful completion of their tasks and are ready to shelter budding shoots to come!

We had 66 students from 36 countries complete 178 tasks in the 7 week contest. Students worked with BRL-CAD on coding, documentation, training, user interface, research, outreach tasks, and quality assurance tasks.

Akshay Kashyap and Cezar El-Nazli were among the 20 lucky and hardworking grand prize winners of GCI-2012 who received a trip to Google’s Mountain View, California, USA Headquarters for themselves and a parent or legal guardian for an award ceremony, an opportunity to meet with Google engineers, explore the Google campus and have a fun day in the San Francisco, California sun.

Google Code In 2013 has been already announced. If you are of the age 13-17 years, a pre-university student, this is the best opportunity for you to grab and get your hands on and step into the whole new world of software development and maintenance. Are You Ready ?

More information on what is Google Code-In, how you can participate, what are the exciting prizes for you, etc. is available here.

"Improving BRL-CAD's networking library":Andrei - Constantin Popescu

by: Plamen Nikiforov

Andrei - Constantin Popescu is a second year undergraduate at Polytechnic University of Bucharest, studying at the computer science department. Here is an interview about Andreis Google Summer of Code project.
Plamen(Pl): How did you found out about BRL-CAD and why did you chose to them?

Andrei(An): I heard about BRL-CAD when I was searching for a Google Summer of Code project to do. After doing some research on their website regarding Google Summer of Code ideas, several interested me particularly.
The language I am currently strongest in is C and I am also interested in computer graphics, this motivated me towards applying for BRL-CAD. Another key aspect was that the BRL-CAD mentoring community was very friendly and helpful towards me.

Pl: Why did you choose "Improving BRL-CAD's networking library" to be your project?

An: The first project idea I proposed was " Code reduction". First, I looked at this project at Sean's suggestion. There were several reasons why I chose this project idea : I was taking a networking course and it would help me consolidate my knowledge and the performance testing seemed a more interesting problem to investigate.

Pl: What were your aims of the project?

An: My initial aims were to investigate and fix any performance bottleneck regarding transfer speed for various file sizes and package sizes, test the code integrity of networking library and eliminating as many unhandled exceptions as well as eliminating global variables from the networking library.

An: Definetly! The most important aspect is that I greatly improved my communication skills. Aside of that, I also improved my capacity to work in a team, developed the ability to work with a large code base and of course improved my implementation skills.

Pl: Would you continue to contribute to BRL-CAD?
An: Of course ! I continued to contribute even after Google Summer of Code. Even if my contributions aren't as numerous as I would like because of my crowded academic schedule, I am trying to contribute for as much as possible. Contributing to BRL-CAD helps me improve knowledge as well as providing code that is actually useful for a large number of people.

Google Summer of Code: Jianbang Wu

by: John

This article is based on some questions I asked Jianbang and in his profile page.

Jianbang chose to apply to BRL-CAD because "The mentors of BRL-CAD are really nice. :)" and because he loves computer graphics and math.
He started working without any Computer Aided Design (CAD) software experience, which he learned during the summer.
He worked on two projects:

First, he followed Cliff's suggestion: "Implicit to NURBS conversion". This consisted in the conversion from implicit primitives to Non Uniform Rational Basis Spline (NURBS) primitives. In this project he also modified some unfinished conventions and added some new primitives.
Since he finished this task before the mid-term evaluation, he decided to make a follow-up: "NURBS surface-surface intersection".

Finally, he suggests future Google Summer of Code students to "Follow your interest, choose the project you like, and you will find Google Summer of Code really an excellent experience".

The intersection curves (green) of a tgc (red) and an epa (blue). (Two segments)

John is a Google Code-In student living in Portugal. He's favourite language is Python although he's considering to widen his knowledge to C.

Linux Release Packaging Process: A mission for Jordi Sayol

By: John

Jordi Sayol is the man behind the automation of the BRL-CAD Linux release packaging process, which he recently finished. His work continues the one made previously by Manuel A. Fernandez Montecelo in .dbm packages.

This article is based on some questions I asked him and on an interview made to Jordi by Gala, a Google Code-in student.

Jordi has been working with BRL-CAD since January 2011,with his Linux experience (as advanced user) as his only companion. By that time, he started to collaborate on-line with other BRL-CAD team members.

With such a massive project, which has millions of lines of code, he decided to take as his responsability the building of binary packages for Linux systems, since he's not a programmer.

In both interviews, he explains quite accurately the process of making those. He has made two scripts that automate the whole work. What the scripts do is to handle all the pre-building proccess and then create the packages. "In fact the building job is done by debhelper to create deb packages, and the rpmbuild command to create rpm packages. The scripts tries to ensures that all dependencies needed by these commands are available, copy Linux specific files, create configuration files, etc. before building the packages".
The scripts allow anyone to easily create their own deb/rpm packages as needed", since they "create deb/rpm packages for the host architecture where they are executed".
This allows BRL-CAD to be distributed Debian-like and Fedora-like systems, which means a great variety of platforms where BRL-CAD will be able to work. Unfortunately, since Fedora and OpenSUSE don't share the same nomenclature, their rpm packages must be separate ones.
The scripts can be found at the "sh" folder when you download the BRL-CAD sources.

Since he is not a programmer (only an advanced Linux user), he won't develop other parts of the code, but I think all the BRL-CAD community can be grateful for what he has done.

by John.

John is a Google Code-In student living in Portugal. He's favourite language is Python although he's considering to widen his knowledge to C.

Gala Taylor is a 2012 Google Code-In participant. Although she has used various Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) products over the years, and has contributed example files and tutorials to several projects, this is the first time she has actively participated in the development of FOSS code. Gala is currently in 9th grade, and her favorite computer language is Java.

Gala Taylor: New BRL-CAD Linux Release Packaging Process Automation

By: Gala Taylor

BRL-CAD supports Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, and openSUSE, and other Linux distributions. Jordi Sayol recently finished automating the BRL-CAD Linux release packaging process, and he took some time out to chat with Gala Taylor about it - and also answer some question about what it's like to work on the BRL-CAD project.

Gala Taylor (GT): How long have you been working on the BRL-CAD project?

Jordi Sayol (JS): I've been involved with the BRL-CAD project since January 2011.

GT: How much education and experience were required to prepare you to contribute to the BRL-CAD project?

JS: My experience is just as an advanced Linux user.

GT: Do you need to physically meet with the other team members in order to contribute to the BRL-CAD project, or is it sufficient to work on-line?

JS: All of my collaboration is done on-line.

GT: The BRL-CAD project is a collection of over four hundred tools, utilities and applications, with over a million lines of source code. With such a massive and complex system, how do you decide what to work on? Is it necessary to understand all that code in order to contribute to the project?

JS: My responsibility is focused on building binary packages of BRL-CAD for Linux systems.

GT: Besides the release processing work which is described in the HACKING file, can you walk me through the process of actually transforming a developer’s checked-in source code into an .rpm or .deb that is ready to be downloaded and installed?

JS: It's quite simple. I have created two bash scripts that automate this process. The "sh/make_deb.sh" script creates a deb package installable on Debian-like systems. This currently includes Debian, Ubuntu, Linux Mint, and other distributions. The "sh/make_rpm.sh" script creates an rpm package for Fedora-like systems. This includes Fedora, Centos, Redhat, and some other distributions, or OpenSUSE, depending on the system where it is built. There are separate rpm packages for Fedora and OpenSUSE because they do not share the same nomenclature on their packages. Note also that both scripts create deb/rpm packages for the host architecture where they are executed, and that the results are currently only tested on x86_32 and x86_64 hosts.

With these scripts, anyone can easily create their own deb/rpm packages as needed. This is especially useful if the user wants to install BRL-CAD on a very old system, maybe requiring special compilation for specific graphic cards drivers, etc.

Jordi Sayol is the maintainer of the BRL-CAD Linux release packaging process.

Gala Taylor is a 2012 Google Code-In participant. Although she has used various Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) products over the years, and has contributed example files and tutorials to several projects, this is the first time she has actively participated in the development of FOSS code. Gala is currently in 9th grade, and her favorite computer language is Java.

Kyle Bodt: Ronja

Ronja (Reasonable Optical Near Joint Access) is an innovative piece of equipment that utilizes reliable optical data links to create a current communication range of 1.4 km and a speed of 10Mbps full duplex that can be used as a general purpose wireless link for virtually any networking project. This is a very important project for Twibright Labs, a small group of computer science graduate students operating out of Charles University in Prague in the Czech Republic. The group specializes in the usage of Free Software and User Controlled Technology Development.

The primary output for the Ronja project is a design. The lab does not intend to manufacture and sell the hardware that is being designed but wants to engage in open source development of the technology. The philosophy surrounding User Controlled Technology is the ideal that the end-user is provided with unrestricted access to the intellectual property surrounding the technology, including the tools that are being used to create it. One tool playing an integral part in the development of the Ronja designs is BRL-CAD. All of the models that Twibright labs use to display the different variants of their Ronja concept were created with the help of BRL-CAD. BRL-CAD has allowed the members of Twibright labs to create instructional diagrams so that the users and builders of their open source technology will be able to have the latest information with regard to the proper construction of a Ronja unit. The interactive geometry editor and ray-tracers in BRL-CAD are an integral part in the communication of design plans for Twibright labs and enables them to connect with the users, who are the driving force behind the User Controlled Technology ideal.

Initial Drafts

These are incomplete articles being worked on. Short 250 to 500-word articles (not counting tables, images, etc) are usually perfect.

Documentation Redux

BRL-CAD was selected to participate in the 2013 Google Summer of Code Doc Camp. A team of contributors got together in California, brainstormed, and wrote an entire book for BRL-CAD in just a few days. They created a guide for contributing to BRL-CAD.

BRL-CAD doc team getting to work writing a book from scratch in less than three days

Contrary to and perhaps because of longstanding efforts, people interested in improving BRL-CAD sometimes find themselves lost in a sea of information. In all, BRL-CAD has more than a million words of documentation across hundreds of manual pages, dozens of tutorials and examples, hundreds of wiki pages, dozens of technical papers, and other resources. It's a lot, created over decades of development.

Over the course of a week in October, members from our community participated in something fresh. Something different.

Unconference brainstorming stickies

A team of individuals traveled to the Google headquarters in Mountain View, California, to participate in a 2-part event: an unconference and a book sprint. Teams for GNOME, OpenMRS, and BRL-CAD arrived on the Google campus and talked about techniques, tools, formats, documenters, and more. By the end of the week, seven individuals from four different countries, three continents, and one oceanic island produced a book for BRL-CAD more than 100 pages in length.

As free open source software, one of BRL-CAD's greatest strengths is that anyone can get involved and directly contribute. You can make it better. This new book focuses on that aspect and introduces people to the project while providing detailed information for developers, writers, artists, and other potential contributors.

Fresh air break with Allen Gunn of Aspiration and Adam Hyde of FLOSS Manuals

This new effort kick-starts a campaign to dramatically improve BRL-CAD's documentation, starting with this new contributor's guide.

Attending the camp provided an exciting opportunity to get a grasp on new techniques for documenting and sharing information about our software, hopefully in ways that help us grow our community. BRL-CAD's team included Sean Morrison, Eric Edwards, Cliff Yapp, Harmanpreet Singh, Check Nyah, Isaac Kamga, and Scott Nesbitt. Thank you to Google for their sponsorship, Aspiration for magnificently framing the event, and FLOSS Manuals for directing the production.

The BRL-CAD Doc Camp Team

Anurag Murty: Voxelizing Geometry

Given a set of primitives as input, the voxelize command uses the data obtained from BRL-CAD's raytracer to represent the input in the form of voxels(Volumetric Picture Elements). A uniform grid of rays is uniformly shot on the given input and an approximation of the volume filled in each voxel region is made from the raytracing data. Depending on the approximate volume of the voxel filled, a voxel is classified as IN or OUT of the voxelized output. The voxels are represented as RPPs.
Such voxelized outputs have applications in Volumetric rendering and finite element analysis.

-d - Specifies the level of detail(precision in approximation of volume) required. An input of n means that n * n rays will be shot through each row, and an approximation of volume filled is reached averaging these n * n values

-s - Specifies the voxel size in each direction.

-t - Specifies the threshold volume to decide if voxel is to be included in the voxelized output.

new_obj - Name for resultant primitive that is a region containing the resulting voxels.

old_obj - Name of source primitive or collection.

NOTES-

1. A greater level of detail usually implies a much better approximation of fill volumes at the cost of more computations.

2. Lesser voxel sizes give a more precise representation of the input at the cost of more memory requirements.

3. Threshold value (the argument of -t) should be a value between 0 and 1, and not a percentage.

Cristina Precup: Visualizing Directed Acyclic Graphs

Visualizing Constructive Solid Geometry is a project meant to illustrate in an intuitive and interactive manner the hierarchical structure of .g geometry databases.

For the representation of the hierarchies, the Adaptagrams graph library has been used. This made possible organizing the objects contained within the database into directed acyclic graphs.

Following, are the steps that have been taken in developing the graph layout API:

Integrate the Adaptagrams library into BRL-CAD.

Traverse the geometry database and distinguish different types of objects (primitive, combination, non-geometry) within it, as well as, establish the operations between them (union, difference, ...). Add all this data to the graph structure constructed with Adaptagrams.

Display the objects using a Tk Canvas widget inside a window.

Develop a decorative routine that sets different colors for different types of objects, correspondingly.

Create a name label for each represented object.

Develop a layout algorithm that aligns the nodes of the graph in a hierarchical way.

Introduce the graph command in both MGED and Archer. It has two subcommands:

show which displays a list with the name and type of the objects along with the nodes' and edges' positions;

positions that lists the names, types and positions of the corresponding nodes within the graph;

Introduce the igraph command in both MGED and Archer. This command pops up a graph based visualization window of the currently opened .g database. Its documentation can be found in brlman.

As an example, here is how the graph for the share/db/axis.g database looks like now:

Further work that can extend the interactive trait of the graph layout API includes adding user actions upon the graph such as move (dragging a node) or delete functionalities.

Ksenija Slivko: Reducing Code

Abstract

The main aim of this project was to decrease the number of lines of code in the project. Since the project is being developing for quite a long time there were many "copy-pastes". They were redacted.

The process of developing

Coding period can be divided into three parts:

reduction in the single files

reduction in different files in the single program or library

reduction in different libraries

Improving

Since the project is quite large the redaction can be continued

Laijiren: NURBS Tessellation: What, Why, How?

Abstract

Non-Uniform Rational B-Spline surfaces are widely used in CAD system. But they are not suitable for direct visualization on modern GPU systems. Today’s graphics hardware supports the high-speed display of polygonal objects consisting of triangles. This means that analytical surfaces (like NURBS) need to be triangulated so they can be displayed by 3D graphics cards.

Main work

For debugging tool

add 'plot SCV' to display control point net and 'plot TESS' to display the result of tessellation

For surface tree

subdivide a Nurbs surface in a adaptive method and a new recursion termination condition for surface subdivision.

reference:NURBS rendering in OpenSG Plus

implement the doTrimming function in Surface tree.

1)compute the intersection between trim curve and rect's edge of sub-surface in parameter region

2)implement a trimLoop class to get the valid loop and the trimmed loop

3)triangulate the valid loop in form of polygon

Suryajith Chillara: Benchmark Performance Database

Abstract

The main idea is to store the data both in the database and the log files stored in the archive. The storage in the database enables the content to be searched via the parameters such as machine descriptions, versions, results and could be compared. The storage as a file in the archive is to maintain a back up of the file and whenever a developer needs a specific bunch of benchmark logs, he could get them from the archive with or without the help of the database.

Main Components

Log Parser : The data of the log file needs to be parsed and the relevant and important information has to be logged in the database so as to make the data access for the graphic display through the frontend could be made possible.

Web API : Implemented via the bottle framework so as to submit the logs from the brlcad installation via scripts.

Web backend : A backend has been implemented as a MVC framework from scratch using the python bottle framework.

Frontend : The website that can offer multiple mechanisms for adding new performance run data into the database and provide multiple graphical and non-graphical visualizations of aggregate performance data (i.e., graphs, charts, tables, etc). Graphs, tables and charts are generated with the help of Google Charts via wrapper which generates the javascript code to interact with the Google Charts service.

Plumbing between these components is via the python scripts.

Tool & Service dependancies

Python 2.7 and libraries

Bottle web framework

MySQL

Google Charts

Wu Jianbang: NURBS surface-surface intersections

I focused on the "NURBS surface-surface intersections" project after the mid-term evaluation of this year's GSoC, before which I worked on converting implicit primitives to NURBS B-rep forms.

The function calculating NURBS surface-surface intersection curves is surface_surface_intersection() which is declared in include/nurbs.h and implemented in src/libnurbs/opennurbs_ext.cpp. It outputs intersection curves in 3d space and in both surfaces' UV parameter spaces.

Split the two surfaces, both into four parts, and calculate the sub-surfaces' bounding boxes

Calculate the intersection of sub-surfaces' bboxes, if they do intersect, go deeper with splitting surfaces and smaller bboxes, otherwise trace back.

After getting the intersecting bboxes, approximate the surface inside the bbox with two triangles, and calculate the intersection points of the triangles (both in 3d space and two surfaces' UV space)

Fit the intersection points into polyline curves, and then to NURBS curves. Points with distance less than max_dis are considered in one curve.

It needs to be mentioned here that the value max_dis can be provided by the user or generated automatically.

Besides, after calculating the intersection curves, the next steps towords evaluated NURBS are splitting the surfaces into sub-surfaces with the intersection curves as their boundaries, and some inside-outside tests to decide which sub-surfaces should be included in the final object. Some work on splitting has been done, generating some b-rep faces that can pass IsValid(), but still further work is needed.

Andrei Popescu: Network Performance Testing

The project that I have been working on during the summer, as part of the Google Summer of Code program, can be broken down into three independent parts and it consisted in running various tests for the BRL-CAD networking library(Libpkg) .

Speed testing and investigations to uncover any potential performance bottleneck.

Unit tests and code review to find and cover any untreated exceptions(crashes) in the Libpkg library.

Eliminate the assumption of globals in the API.

For the first part, I have run two types of tests :

Local ones, both the "sender" and the "receiver" were located on localhost.
The script gathered data regarding the transmission speed for each set of package sizes (Here, package refers to the package created by networking library, not networking packages) respectively file sizes.

Remote ones, where the "sender" and the "receiver" were on separate machines, connected using SSH. The script ran and the data gathered was done in the same way as the localhost one.Using the data obtained from the tests, two 3D graphs were drawn.However, the tests were inconclusive, I could not find an "ideal" package size to use regardless of file size.

After Mid-term I focused mostly on second part. I used test units from libbu(Utility library) as an example for the unit test type and design.
When the mentioned tests were run, several exceptions that caused crashes were discovered. Lastly, I have written fixes for the discovered crashes.

The third part of the project has not been covered yet, so more work is needed.Although, I am doing my best to finish it in the following weeks.

Chris Dueck: Calculating 2D Sketch Surface Area

Calculating the surface area of a 2D Sketch primitive is not a trivial task. Sketches are created interactively by the user, and can contain straight line segments, circular arc segments (and full circles), as well as Bezier and NURBS curves.

The method used to approximately compute the area of a 2D sketch is as follows:

1.) Approximate the sketch by a polygon

2.) Compute the area of the polygon exactly using Green's Theorem

3.) Add the areas of any circular arc segments that were created during (1)

To approximate the sketch by a polygon, each possible curve type of a sketch must be considered.

If the curve is a straight line, it need not be approximated.

If the curve is a circular arc, it must be determined if it is a full circle (in which case its area can be computed easily) or if it is a circular arc segment. If it is a circular arc segment, the line segment from the beginning of the arc to the endpoint is added to the polygon, and the excess area of the circular arc segment itself can be calculated easily (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_segment)

If the curve is a Bezier curve, it can be approximated by a series of circular arcs. The algorithm used can be found here (http://itc.ktu.lt/itc354/Riskus354.pdf). The algorithm recursively subdivides the Bezier until it is approximated to tolerance by a biarc and uses the curvature value of the Bezier at a point to determine the depth of subdivision. Then each circular arc in the approximation of the Bezier curve is treated as above.

Cliff Yapp: NURBS Ray Tracing in BRL-CAD

Over the past year, an intense development effort by BRL-CAD's development team has successfully implemented raytracing of Non-Uniform Rational BSpline (NURBS) geometry within the BRL-CAD Computer-Aided Design (CAD) package. NURBS surfaces are very general, very complex mathematical shapes used by virtually all modern commercial CAD software packages. Because BRL-CAD did not originally support this type of geometry, commercial models could only be imported into BRL-CAD after a labor-intensive and difficult conversion process from NURBS form to triangle-base geometry (referred to in BRL-CAD as Bags-of-Triangles or BoTs). The new NURBS raytracing capability builds on work by many developers over a period of years, who in turn built on the open source library OpenNURBS. Support for this primitive type means BRL-CAD can now store and raytrace data from commercial models without requiring preliminary conversion to another type of geometry.

The last major feature needed to make import of commercial models in BRL-CAD straightforward is conversion support for ISO’s "Standard for the Exchange of Product model data" or STEP file format. STEP uses NURBS geometry in its definition, making support for NURBS geometry a necessary prelude to support for STEP import. Most commercial CAD modelers support this file format as an output option, hence STEP support in BRL-CAD would allow a direct path for moving geometric descriptions from a variety of commercial modelers to BRL-CAD. Considerable progress has already been made on STEP import support, but more work is need to bring the code and feature set to "production quality". If anyone would like to join the BRL-CAD open source development effort and has a little familiarity with C++, the step-g converter and its supporting libraries have some simple-yet-useful tasks that would be an excellent and very useful way to explore the project - join BRL-CAD's IRC channel or development email list if you are interested!

Erik Greenwald: Bolting ADRT's libtie under the hood

BoT vs Tie pixdiff

Initial progress on the integration of ADRT's libtie "triangle intersection engine" with LIBRT.

Tan YuGin: BRL-CAD's Code Hardening Efforts

A/N: Written as a Google Code-in 2013 task.

BRL-CAD is a large-scale software based on decades of development and contains over a million lines of code. Its contributors are numerous and come from countries all over the world. Any project of such magnitude is bound to face problems with ensuring consistency and high standards across its various aspects.

The core team behind BRL-CAD, however, has sought to alleviate such issues as far as possible. In a ‘HACKING’ document included with the rest of the software, the team has provided universal guidelines and good practices for all BRL-CAD code, in areas such as code formatting, organization, and conventions. BRL-CAD also encourages the use of various tools to make it easier for them to check for problems or errors in their work. These tools include the Simian similarity analyzer, a program that detects duplicated code and allows developers to refactor it into space-saving functions, and the built-in CPPCHECK-CLEANUP tool, which checks for issues such as stylistic errors or unused functions.

BRL-CAD enforces the practice of strict compilation, treating all of the compiler’s warnings as matters that have to be resolved before development can proceed. Any detected issues that are in actual fact errors can thus be fixed. Even incorrectly detected errors are often due to weaknesses in the code and can also be dealt with.

Finally, BRL-CAD has since 2006 participated in the Coverity Scan Initiative, where a thorough source code analysis is performed and a list of detected problems generated. In 2012, a team of core developers met up in person and fixed over fifteen hundred of the issues reported in the latest scan. This reduced BRL-CAD’s defect density to just 0.22 defects per thousand lines of code- less than a quarter of the industry average.

Through a range of comprehensive guidelines and tools that help contributors to ensure that their code abides by these rules, BRL-CAD can thus be developed and contributed to by numerous programmers from across the globe while simultaneously maintaining a high standard and consistency of code, ultimately resulting in a feature-packed yet well-refined software for the larger community.

Idea Hopper

These are ideas for interesting or useful publications. We need someone to at least write a draft.

BRL-CAD's Evolutionary API

Talk about BRL-CAD deprecation process.

Introduction to new .deb and .rpm builds

Brief article overviewing the efforts by jordisayol for Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, and openSUSE. Included are new icons, menu items, mime type associations, and more.

2010 End Of Year Review

Article giving an overview of the past year's highlight developments with hints at what 2011 may bring. Alternatively, may be the annual statistics review if we switch from fiscal to calendar year reporting.

Erik Greenwald: ADRT/ISST Visualization

Article introducing ADRT/ISST core capability.

Bob Parker: Alpha Archer: Working Towards Next Generation MGED

Article introducing Archer's core new features that will be "coming" to MGED. Undo, interactive editing, tree view, and info panels come to mind.

Finding the Hot Spots

Article on the rt lighting model Stephen Kennedy developed that visualizes the time spent per-pixel.

Point Clouds

Article introducing the new point cloud primitive.

bn_mat_inv: singular matrix

Article on the v4 format and binary compatibility.

Model Showcase: Goliath

Article talking about the making of the Goliath model.

Model Showcase: Chumaciera

Article on Pedro Baptista's bearing model.

Model Showcase: Proyecto Catapulta

Article on a model developed by André Santos, António Almeida, and Pedro Ferreira.

Model Showcase: Union Coupling Tool

Article on a model developed by Inês de Matos under teacher Luís Ferreira. The project focuses on a tool, union coupling, based on the book, http://purl.pt/14352 , page 122 of the original book and page 128 of the file, figures 108 and 109.

Geometry Service FAQ

FAQ summarization of the GS as it pertains to the wider open source community.